Crystal optics
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Crystal optics is the branch of optics that describes the behaviour of light in anisotropic media, that is, media (such as crystals) in which light behaves differently depending on which direction the light is propagating. Crystals are often naturally anisotropic, and in some media (such as liquid crystals) it is possible to induce anisotropy by applying e.g. an external electric field.
Isotropic media
Typical transparent media such as glasses are isotropic, which means that light behaves the same way no matter which direction it is travelling in the medium. In terms of Maxwell's equations in a dielectric, this gives a relationship between the electric displacement field D and the electric field E:
- [ \mathbf = \varepsilon_0 \mathbf + \mathbf ]
Electric susceptibility
In an isotropic and linear medium, this polarisation field P is proportional to and parallel to the electric field E:
- [ \mathbf = \chi \varepsilon_0 \mathbf ]
- [ \mathbf = \varepsilon_0 \mathbf + \chi \varepsilon_0 \mathbf = \varepsilon_0 (1 + \chi) \mathbf = \varepsilon \mathbf ]
- [ \varepsilon = \varepsilon_0 (1 + \chi) ]
- [ n = \sqrt ]
Anisotropic media
In an anisotropic medium, such as a crystal, the polarisation field P is not necessarily aligned with the electric field of the light E. In a physical picture, this can be thought of as the dipoles induced in the medium by the electric field having certain preferred directions, related to the physical structure of the crystal. This can be written as:
- [ \mathbf = \varepsilon_0 \boldsymbol \times \mathbf .]
[\begin P_x \\ P_y \\ P_z \end = \varepsilon_0\begin \chi_ & \chi_ & \chi_ \\ \chi_ & \chi_ & \chi_ \\ \chi_ & \chi_ & \chi_ \end\begin E_x \\ E_y \\ E_z \end]
or using the summation convention:
- [ P_i = \varepsilon_0 \chi_ E_j \quad.]
From thermodynamic arguments it can be shown that χij = χji, i.e. the χ tensor is symmetric. In accordance with the spectral theorem, it is thus possible to diagonalise the tensor by choosing the appropriate set of coordinate axes, zeroing all components of the tensor except χxx, χyy and χzz. This gives the set of relations:
- [ P_x = \varepsilon_0 \chi_ E_x]
- [ P_y = \varepsilon_0 \chi_ E_y]
- [ P_z = \varepsilon_0 \chi_ E_z]
It follows that D and E are also related by a tensor:
- [ \mathbf = \varepsilon_0 \mathbf + \mathbf = \varepsilon_0 \mathbf + \varepsilon_0 \boldsymbol \times \mathbf = \varepsilon_0 (1+ \boldsymbol) \times \mathbf = \varepsilon_0 \boldsymbol \times \mathbf .]
- [n_ = (1 + \chi_)^ = (\varepsilon_)^ .]
- [n_ = (1 + \chi_)^ = (\varepsilon_)^ .]
If χxx = χyy ≠ χzz, the crystal is known as uniaxial. If χxx ≠ χyy and χxx ≠ χzz the crystal is called biaxial. A uniaxial crystal exhibits two refractive indices, an "ordinary" index (no) for light polarised in the x or y directions, and an "extraordinary" index (ne) for polarisation in the z direction. A uniaxial crystal is "positive" if ne > no and "negative" if ne < no. Light polarised at some angle to the axes will experience a different phase velocity for different polarization components, and cannot be described by a single index of refraction. This is often depicted as an index ellipsoid.
Other effects
Certain nonlinear optical phenomena such as the electro-optic effect cause a variation of a medium's permittivity tensor when an external electric field is applied, proportional (to lowest order) to the strength of the field. This causes a rotation of the principal axes of the medium and alters the behaviour of light travelling through it; the effect can be used to produce light modulators.
In response to a magnetic field, some materials can have a dielectric tensor that is complex-Hermitian; this is called a gyro-magnetic or magneto-optic effect. In this case, the principal axes are complex-valued vectors, corresponding to elliptically polarized light, and time-reversal symmetry can be broken. This can be used to design optical isolators, for example.
(A dielectric tensor that is not Hermitian gives rise to complex eigenvalues, which corresponds to a material with gain or absorption at a particular frequency.)
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